Give Red Light Cameras The Black Flag

Best story yet on the red light camera controversy. Some of you may know that I have been the lone voice fighting the introduction of red light cameras to Belmar. Our current administration has been savoringcontemplating the idea for months now and even had a salesman from a red light camera company give them a presentation during a council meeting a few months ago. I was at that meeting and didn’t hear any concern expressed about the privacy rights of the citizens. At a subsequent meeting I directed our council to some of the same studies mentioned below. And again right here I thank Matt Doherty for showing enough interest at that time to at least ask me for the links to the studies. Anyway, I have gone so far as to publicly inform the mayor and council and (now) police chief Tom Palmisano that if they install red light cameras I will be using the Freedom of Information Act to obtain accident reports from any accidents that occur at these intersections.

Phil Elmore says devices are used to peer over shoulders, reach into wallets

By Phil Elmore

As the light turned green above me, I started to accelerate into the intersection. I looked right, then left. As I did so I saw the Ford F150 barreling toward me. In disbelief, I stopped the car and watched the big truck thunder past, brazenly running the light and narrowly missing me. It is at least ostensibly to prevent collisions (such as this incident could have been) that those in authority advocate the use of red-light cameras (RLCs). Red-light, speed and traffic cameras watch every single driver passing through an intersection or past a given point, seeing everything, forgetting nothing, often issuing tickets without warning. You cannot reason with a traffic camera; you cannot describe to it mitigating circumstances; you cannot offer to it exculpatory evidence. If you are issued a ticket by a police officer, you may face that officer in court and defend yourself from the charge. If you are issued a ticket by a red-light camera, you are effectively guilty until proven innocent – with little or no opportunity to provide such proof. The camera, a machine, is presumed to be infallible … and you, a citizen of what is supposed to be a free country, are at the mercy of a device that feels no such emotion.

In the eyes of those in power, red-light cameras and similar devices provide a steady stream of revenue. They do not tire; they do not join unions; they need not be paid. They can work around the clock, and they catch every single violator. At least in theory, such public surveillance and punishment provides a deterrent. Traffic cameras are presumed to save lives by preventing drivers from believing they can run a red light or exceed the speed limit without being caught. But is this really true?

Only a few months ago, a Laura Frazier reported that crashes increase at corners where traffic cameras are rolling. “New data released by the sheriff’s office shows 24 crashes at [an intersection in Brandon, Fla.] from January through March, after the traffic monitoring devices were installed. There were nine accidents at the corner in the same period last year.” This is hardly empirical data – but there’s plenty of that. Red-light and traffic cameras are far from an automotive safety panacea. Multiple studies, in fact, show that red-light or traffic cameras increase accidents.

The Virginia Transportation Research Council reported in 2007 that red-light cameras increased “crash costs” as often as they did not. The report concluded that the results of the RLC crash data “cannot be used to justify the widespread installation of cameras because they are not universally effective.” Three years before that, in 2004, the Urban Transit Instituteconcluded that red-light cameras increase some types of accidents while having a marginal effect on fatal red-light violations. “The results,” the study reads, “do not support the view that red-light cameras reduce crashes. Instead, we find that RLCs are associated with higher levels of many types and severity categories of crashes.”

These results were not, in fact, news, because the same effect had already been observed in a Canadian study of the same type. In Ontario in 2003, the Ministry of Transportation concluded, in examining a red-light camera pilot program, that the cameras contributed to a nearly 20 percent overall increase in “property damage” collisions. Drivers were slamming on their brakes to avoid getting tickets – and causing accidents thanks to their abrupt maneuvering in traffic. Rear-end collisions alone increased by nearly 50 perent, which makes perfect sense given that such cameras cause alarmed drivers to slow down suddenly or stop without warning.

Liberals love traffic cameras. They never fail to advocate any measure that allows Big Brotherto peer over your shoulder while reaching into your wallet. It is because they adore the thought of 24/7 control of every facet of your life that they like surveillance cameras so much. If they can watch you, they can punish you when you step out of line. Democrats and leftists of every stripe are also addicted to your money. Any municipal scheme that takes money from your pocket and puts it in their coffers is something they support, and RLCs are nothing if not a money-making scheme. We’ve known this and acknowledged it for nearly a decade.

In 2001, the office of then House Majority Leader Dick Armey claimed that red-light cameras “present a perverse disincentive for local jurisdictions to fix intersections with excessive red-light entries. It’s hard to fix a ‘problem’ that brings in millions in revenue. In other words, red-light cameras aren’t fixing a safety problem, they’re creating one.”

Unfortunately, as evidence mounts implicating traffic cameras as problem makers rather than problem solvers, those in power simply ignore the data. They insist that such cameras “save lives” and thus such public surveillance is for your own good. The control – and the money – such cameras offer is far more appealing than anything so prosaic as the truth about those cameras’ effects on public safety or civil rights.

The traffic camera is a camel’s nose in the tent. Liberals will not be satisfied until your every waking moment takes place under a camera’s lens. What we must ask ourselves is whether we really want to live like this for the illusory promise of improved public safety.

2 Comments

Anonymous wrote:

You state that “Liberals” love red light cameras. I am a Liberal, a traffic safety police officer in Momouth County (recently) retired and had strongly argued to my Captain after hearing a presentation from a salesman on behalf of NOT installing such devices in the town I worked in. I felt they were unconstitutional and were nothing more than a money making device and did nothing to reduce crashes or injuries at intersections which by the way is the goal of any traffic safety program. So, don’t please do not use politics in framing a logical conclusion because your premises are wrong and therefore your conclusion is not sound. You state “Liberals will not be satisfied until your every waking moment takes place under a cameras lens” Sir, I can assure your this is a false premise and your argument thus is not sound. If you want people to vote for your please refrain from these politically charged statements. I would like to think that after twenty seven years of law enforcement experiance with twelve of those years involved in traffic safety that I would have a greater knowledge concerning similar issues than the average person. In addition, even “Liberals” (like we are un-American or worse) may have similar agreements more than you thing. And by the way, I read where you were suprised that more people did not vote for you…..loose the attitude and maybe next time you will do better and some of us “Liberals” will give you a chance.

Actually I agree with you. I didn’t write that article, I only re-published it. It was written by Phil Elmore for WorldNetDaily, a very conservative web site. I did state in my introduction to it that it was the best article I’ve seen about the subject but that was because he told the truth about how bad these cameras are for our safety, privacy, and freedom. I don’t think it’s a liberal/conservative issue either. There’s plenty of conservatives that go for this same crap. That’s why I’m a libertarian.
Incidently, I am all in favor of security cameras, as long as the tapes are only looked at to investigate reported crimes.